Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER III THE EMPERORS AT CONSTANTINOPLE 476-527 Contrast between the fates of the Eastern and Western EmpiresThe East recoveus its strengthLeo I. and the IsauriansThe Emperor Zeno and the rebellion against himWars of Zeno with the two Theodorics, 478- 483The 'Henoticon 'Character of the Emperor AnastasiusRebellion of the IsauriansWar with Persia, 503-5The ' Blue and Green' FactionsRebellion of VitalianAccession of Justin I. At Rome the emperors of the third quarter of the fifth centuryall the ephemeral Caesars whose blood-stained annals fill the space between the death of Valentinian m. and the usurpation of Odoacerhad been the mere creatures of the barbarian, or semi-barbarian, 'patricians' and 'masters of the soldiers,' to whom they owed alike their elevations and their untimely ends. The history of those troubled years would be more logically arranged under the names of the Caesar-makers, Ricimer, Gundobad, Orestes, than under those of the unhappy puppets whom they manipulated. But, when we turn our eyes eastward to Constantinople, we are surprised to find how entirely different was the aspect of affairs. The Western Empire was rapidly falling to pieces, province after province dropping out of the power of the emperor, and becoming part of the realm of some Gothic, Burgundian, or Vandal prince, who paid the most shadowy homage, or no homage at all, to the ephemeral Caesar at Period i. C Rome. The Eastern Empire, on the other hand, maintained Contrast be- its boundaries intact, and was slowly building I"d wfstern UP its strength for renewed activity in the next Empires. century. While nine emperors' reigns filled no more than twenty-one years at Rome (455-476), two emperors were reigning for thirty-four years (457-491) on the Bosphorus. A...